I will start this thread with an expression of gratitude for Cambridge in Color for their forums and amazing information and technical knowledge. I am truly overwhelmed as I did not expect to see anything so comprehensive on Photography anywhere.
So for my first post inquiry: I have been reading here ravenously on Bits per Channel or Bits per Color (BPC) and it is a fascinating topic and well explained here as it pertains to displaying colors on display devices, and I pretty much understand that.
What I don't fully understand is the BPC as it pertains to the printer drivers and what is finally sent to the printer, and how the output might vary with different images.
For an example, I am on a Windows Machine (Win 10 Pro-64) with a Canon Pro-100 printer.
Canon provides a Pro-100 driver which, I understand, is an 8 BPC driver.
Canon also provides a driver called XPS, which they claim is a 16 BPC driver and can only be installed if the original 8 BPC driver has already been installed. I have no idea how they work, but I am just looking for best printer output results for any specific image.
Now, what I have been led to believe from elsewhere (and I don't believe it) is that the Canon Windows 16 BPC driver is not a true 16 BPC driver, but interpolates data it gets from the application, even if the application is using 16 BPC, and that even the XPS driver is really 8 BPC.
Also it has been stated to me from elsewhere that the Mac printer drivers are native 16 BPC, and I won't dispute that since I have no idea and don't have a Mac, but it was also stated that neither Epson nor Canon has developed a 16 BPC driver for Windows (which again I don't believe), and I know for sure that the Windows OS at least has that capability for 16 BPC since it released Windows 3.1.
So can anyone here enlighten me on the Canon Windows XPS Pro-100 driver, or Epson Windows printer drivers at they pertains to 8 or 16 BPC capability?